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MANKIND has used trees as a source of fuel for thousands of years. But now the notion of exploiting trees for fuel is being updated with a high-tech twist. The idea is to make ethanol, a biofuel that usually comes from maize (corn) or sugar cane, from trees instead. Politicians and environmentalists are embracing ethanol for a number
of reasons. Unlike oil, ethanol is renewable: to make more of it, you grow more crops. And blending ethanol into ordinary petrol, or burning it directly in special "flex-fuel" engines, reduces greenhouse-gas emissions.
Why use trees, rather than maize or sugar cane, as a feedstock for ethanol? Because "treethanol" has the potential to be much more energy efficient. The ratio of the energy yielded by a given amount of ethanol to the energy needed to produce it is called the "energy balance". The energy balance for ethanol made from maize is the
subject of much controversy, but America's energy department puts it at 1.3; in other words, the ethanol yields 30% more energy than was needed to produce it. For ethanol made from sugar cane in Brazil, the energy balance is 8.3, according to the International Energy Agency.
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THE ECONOMIST
Mar 8th 2007
Woodstock revisited
Derek Bacon
Energy: Could new techniques for producing ethanol make old-fashioned
trees the biofuel of the future?
http://www.economist.com/science/tq/displayStory.cfm?story_id=8766061
MANKIND has used trees as a source of fuel for thousands of years.
But now the notion of exploiting trees for fuel is being updated with
a high-tech twist. The idea is to make ethanol, a biofuel that
usually comes from maize (corn) or sugar cane, from trees instead.
Politicians and environmentalists are embracing ethanol for a number
of reasons. Unlike oil, ethanol is renewable: to make more of it, you
grow more crops. And blending ethanol into ordinary petrol, or
burning it directly in special "flex-fuel" engines, reduces
greenhouse-gas emissions.
Why use trees, rather than maize or sugar cane, as a feedstock for
ethanol? Because "treethanol" has the potential to be much more
energy efficient. The ratio of the energy yielded by a given amount
of ethanol to the energy needed to produce it is called the "energy
balance". The energy balance for ethanol made from maize is the
subject of much controversy, but America's energy department puts it
at 1.3; in other words, the ethanol yields 30% more energy than was
needed to produce it. For ethanol made from sugar cane in Brazil, the
energy balance is 8.3, according to the International Energy Agency.
But for ethanol made from trees, grasses and other types of biomass
which contain a lot of cellulose, the energy balance can be as high
as 16, at least in theory. In practice the problem is that producing
such "cellulosic" ethanol is much more difficult and expensive than
producing it from other crops. But the science, technology and
economics of treethanol are changing fast. Researchers are racing to
develop ways to chip, ferment, distil and refine wood quickly and
cheaply.
Interest in cellulosic ethanol is growing as the drawbacks of making
ethanol from maize and sugar become apparent. Both are important food
crops, and as ethanol production is stepped up around the world,
greater demand is driving up the prices of everything from animal
feed to cola and biscuits. The price of a bushel of corn rose by 70%
between September 2006 and January 2007 to reach its highest level in
a decade. Mexico's president, Felipe Calderón, even capped the price
of corn tortillas in January as America's fast-growing ethanol
industry caused prices to rocket. There are clear signs of a backlash
against ethanol made from food crops. Supply is struggling to keep
up, and as more governments introduce schemes to promote biofuels and
cut greenhouse-gas emissions, the tension between food and fuel will
only intensify.
Growing maize requires a lot of land, water and agrichemicals, so
environmental groups such as America's Natural Resources Defence
Council argue that it is merely a short-term, first-generation
approach to making ethanol. Most energy experts reckon that using
maize-based ethanol as a substitute for petrol can reduce America's
demand for petrol by 10-15% at best. As for sugar, its growing value
as a biofuel feedstock means that in Brazil, which is now one of the
world's largest producers and exporters of ethanol, there is pressure
to flatten rainforests to make more room for sugar production. One
green objective (reducing dependency on fossil fuels) thus conflicts
with another (preserving the environment).
Cellulosic ethanol would address many of these problems. Writing in
the Wall Street Journal recently, Vinod Khosla-a Silicon Valley
venture capitalist who has made a fortune by spotting opportunities
in fields from biotechnology to software-argued that America needs
"cellulosic biofuels to win the war on oil...we must encourage
research on biomass feedstocks, tomorrow's energy crops."
Trees are a particularly promising feedstock because they grow all
year round, require vastly less fertiliser and water and contain far
more carbohydrates (the chemical precursors of ethanol) than food
crops do. Ethanol is the result of the fermentation of sugars, which
is why it can be so simply and efficiently made from sugar cane.
Making ethanol from maize is a bit more complicated: the kernels are
ground into flour and mixed with water, and enzymes are added to
break the carbohydrates from the maize down into sugars, which can
then be fermented into ethanol. Making ethanol from cellulosic
feedstocks is harder still, however, since it involves breaking down
the tough, winding chains of cellulose and hemicellulose from the
walls of plant cells to liberate the sugars. This can be done using a
cocktail of five or six enzymes, says Edward Shonsey, the boss of
Diversa, a biotech firm based in San Diego. The problem is that
although such enzymes exist, they are expensive. It is no use being
able to produce ethanol from trees if it costs $5 a gallon.
The lure of bioprospecting
So if cellulosic ethanol is to live up to its promise, researchers
will have to find cheaper and more efficient enzymes. Grass, trees
and other biomass feedstocks consist of a mixture of cellulose,
hemicellulose and lignin, a tough material that helps plants keep
their shape. Two large producers of industrial enzymes-Genencor, an
American firm, and Novozymes, from Denmark-are working to reduce the
cost of cellulase enzymes, which can break down cellulose, to below
$0.10 per gallon of ethanol. For its part, Diversa is developing
enzymes capable of breaking down hemicellulose. One approach, says Mr
Shonsey, is to tweak the structure of existing enzymes to try to make
them work better. Another approach is "bio-prospecting"-looking for
natural enzymes in unusual places, such as in the stomachs of
wood-eating termites.
Treethanol has particular appeal in countries that have a lot of
trees and import a lot of fossil fuel. Top of the list is New
Zealand: in 2005 the country exported lumber worth NZ$411m ($290m)
and imported fossil fuel costing NZ$4.5 billion. In January two of
New Zealand's Crown Research Institutes, Scion and AgResearch,
announced a research partnership with Diversa. The aim is to
investigate the feasibility of producing enough ethanol from trees to
fuel all the vehicles on New Zealand's roads without fossil-fuel
imports-in other words, to make the country self-sufficient in energy.
BioJoule, a start-up based in Auckland, New Zealand, is planning to
build a pilot plant to produce ethanol from a type of willow. The
idea, says James Watson, BioJoule's co-founder, is that farmers would
grow coppiced willow trees which could be processed into wood chips
and then transported to a conversion plant to be turned into ethanol.
The process would produce two useful by-products: unsulphonated
lignin, a commercially valuable polymer, and xylose, a type of wood
sugar used in dyeing and in foods for diabetics. Selling these
by-products, Mr Watson calculates, means his plant should be able to
produce ethanol for a direct cost of $1.13 per gallon, which compares
favourably with ethanol from American maize ($1.44) and is not much
more than Brazilian sugar-cane ($0.95).
"Treethanol has particular appeal in countries that have a lot of
trees and import a lot of fossil fuel, such as New Zealand and
Sweden."
Because willows are fast-growing and can thrive even on nutrient-poor
soils, BioJoule's technology could also be used in other parts of the
world where there is strong demand for energy, but the soil is not
suitable for food crops. Mr Watson thinks China and India look
promising.
Another country keen on cellulosic ethanol is Sweden, which is
relying heavily upon wood-based solid and liquid biofuels as part of
its plan to wean itself off oil by 2020. But where New Zealanders
favour willows, the Swedes prefer poplars, since they are abundant
and their biology is well understood, says Mats Johnson of SweTree
Technologies, based in Umea in northern Sweden.
Even if the right cocktails of enzymes can be found, sceptics say
treethanol will still have several problems to overcome. In
particular, trees take much longer to grow than grass or food
crops-so it might make more sense to make cellulosic ethanol from
fast-growing grasses, or the leftover biomass from food crops. Some
environmentalists worry that having struggled for years to protect
forests from overexploitation, demand for biofuels could undermine
their efforts.
And now for Frankentreethanol
One idea is to create new, fast-growing trees to address this
problem, either through careful breeding or genetic modification. A
team led by Vincent Chiang, a biologist at North Carolina State
University, is investigating the production of ethanol from
genetically modified trees, with funding from America's Department of
Agriculture. "Our preliminary results clearly point out that
transgenic wood can drastically improve ethanol-production
economics," says Dr Chiang.
A tree's rate of growth is limited by its lignin structure, which is
what determines the tree's strength and form. Trees containing less
lignin and more cellulose would both grow faster and also produce
more ethanol. Some transgenic trees of this kind are being tested in
America. Dr Chiang and his colleagues are also looking at ways to
modulate the genes that determine the structure of a tree's
sugar-containing hemicelluloses in order to make the breakdown and
fermentation processes more efficient.
But Steven Strauss, a forest biologist at Oregon State University,
says that because of the great genetic variation in willows and
poplars, genetic modification may not be necessary. By screening
existing varieties it ought to be possible to identify those well
suited to ethanol production. Conventional breeding and cloning are
very efficient when there is such a variety of species and hybrids to
choose from, he says, and the tight regulation of genetically
modified organisms makes using the technology expensive and time
consuming.
Hundreds of thousands of years ago, when man first gained mastery
over fire, wood was his primary fuel. In the past few centuries
fossil fuels have risen to prominence, with calamitous consequences
for the world's climate. A diversity of new fuels and energy sources
seems the most likely future. It would be fitting if humanity's
portfolio of new energy technologies had a place for wood, the oldest
of them all.
Copyright © 2007 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All
rights reserved.
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